Antioxidant treatment of hindlimb-unloaded mouse counteracts fiber type transition but not atrophy of disused muscles |
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Authors: | Jean-François Desaphy Sabata Pierno Antonella Liantonio Viviana Giannuzzi Claudio Digennaro Maria Maddalena Dinardo Giulia M. Camerino Patrizia Ricciuti Lorenza Brocca Maria Antonietta Pellegrino Roberto Bottinelli Diana Conte Camerino |
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Affiliation: | 1. Section of Pharmacology, Department of Pharmacobiology, Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Bari, Via Orabona 4 - campus, 70125 Bari, Italy;2. Department of Agro-Forestry and Environmental Biology and Chemistry, University of Bari, Bari, Italy;3. Human Physiology Unit, Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Pavia, Pavia, Italy;1. Skeletal Muscle Lab, University College, Kurukshetra University, Kurukshetra, Haryana 136119, India;2. Biochemistry Department, MD University, Rohtak, Haryana 124001, India;3. Pharmaceutical Sciences Department, Cedarville University, OH 45314, USA;1. College of Life Sciences and Key Laboratory of Bioactive Materials Ministry of Education, Nankai University, 300071 Tianjin, PR China;2. Institute of Biomedical Engineering, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical College, Tianjin, 300192, PR China |
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Abstract: | Oxidative stress was proposed as a trigger of muscle impairment in various muscle diseases. The hindlimb-unloaded (HU) rodent is a model of disuse inducing atrophy and slow-to-fast transition of postural muscles. Here, mice unloaded for 14 days were chronically treated with the selective antioxidant trolox. After HU, atrophy was more pronounced in the slow-twitch soleus muscle (Sol) than in the fast-twitch gastrocnemius and tibialis anterior muscles, and was absent in extensor digitorum longus muscle. In accord with the phenotype transition, HU Sol showed a reduced expression of myosin heavy chain type 2A (MHC-2A) and increase in MHC-2X and MHC-2B isoforms. In parallel, HU Sol displayed an increased sarcolemma chloride conductance related to an increased expression of ClC-1 channels, changes in excitability parameters, a positive shift of the mechanical threshold, and a decrease of the resting cytosolic calcium concentration. Moreover, the level of lipoperoxidation increased proportionally to the degree of atrophy of each muscle type. As expected, trolox treatment fully prevented oxidative stress in HU mice. Atrophy was not prevented but the drug significantly attenuated Sol phenotypic transition and excitability changes. Trolox treatment had no effect on control mice. These results suggest possible benefits of antioxidants in protecting muscle against disuse. |
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